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Luxor Museums |
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For those who like museums but find large collections such as that of
the Egyptian Museum in Cairo both bewildering and tiring then Luxor
Museum of Ancient Egyptian Art is the place to see. The museum was
opened in 1975 and contains a modest collection of the highest quality
artworks dating from the Predynastic Period right through to the
Islamic era. The modern building is extremely spacious with plenty of
room to move around and view beautifully displayed objects and
sculpture in peaceful low-lit surroundings. The perfect place to spend
a hot morning in Luxor. |
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The museum is built on two levels with a ramp leading from the ground
floor to the upper floor and contains artefacts from around the Theban
area. Many of the free-standing granite statues depict kings, queens,
and high-status officials who left their images in the Theban temples.
Tutankhamun of course is well-represented by some of the objects from
his tomb in the Valley of the Kings which are not currently on display
in the Cairo Museum. Included among these is the famous majestic head
of a cow goddess, of resin and gilded wood, which is one of the first
items the visitor will see when entering the museum. There are
exhibits of funerary stelae, offering tables, papyri, tomb furniture,
a cartonage mummy-case and many small statuettes and shabtis. In glass
cases in the centre of the upper floor are smaller objects such as
jewellery, funerary and ritual items and artefacts from daily life. |
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One of the main features on the upper floor is a reconstructed wall
from a temple of Amenhotep IV (Akhenaten). The small decorated
sandstone blocks (talatat) were discovered when the ninth pylon at
Karnak Temple was dismantled for reconstruction work, where they had
been used as infill in the original building of the pylon. Individual
talatat blocks on which the famous reliefs were carved can be seen in
many museums, but here the 'Talatat Wall' represents the only
successful attempt at reconstructing a whole wall of the blocks. Over
40,000 decorated blocks from Amenhotep IV's early Karnak building
works have been found, but only those from the ninth pylon are
well-preserved enough to allow their accurate reconstruction. Next to
the talatat, mounted on the wall, is a sandstone head from a colossal
Osirid statue of Amenhotep IV from Karnak. |
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An extension built a few years ago houses a collection of statues
found in the ‘Luxor Cachette’. These beautiful sculptures were
unearthed when a colonnade at Luxor Temple was dismantled for
reconstruction in 1989. They had been buried (for reasons unknown) in
the floor of the courtyard where they lay forgotten for over 2000
years. Many of these statues today look as though they have just come
out of a sculptor’s workshop. |
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Another long-awaited new annex to Luxor Museum has now been completed
and this spacious addition houses many artefacts new to the museum, as
well as some of the artworks from the original galleries. The main
section of the extension has a military theme and is partly devoted to
Egypt’s glorious empire. The long hall has two glass-covered niches
which are the new resting places for the mummies of two great warrior
kings - Ahmose, founder of the New Kingdom and the recently
repatriated Rameses I. The main gallery also includes weaponry and a
hunting chariot of Tutankhamun. The upper level contains some superb
statues, several old favourites relocated from other areas of the
museum, as well as many fascinating objects related to technology and
the arts. The new facilities include a visitor centre, bookshop and
cafeteria. Set in a beautifully lit and temperature-controlled
environment, Luxor Museum is a dramatic showpiece for ancient Egyptian
cultural heritage for which the people of Egypt should be very proud. |
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| How to get there |
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Luxor Museum of Ancient Egyptian Art is on the Corniche, a few hundred
metres north of the tourist bazaar and the Etap Hotel. It is open
daily from 9.00am to 1.00pm and 4.00pm to 9.00pm in winter. Hours may
change in summer. |
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The Luxor Museum of Mummification |
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The Luxor Museum of Mummification which opened in May 1997 is the
first in the world dedicated to this subject.
The modern purpose built museum consists of only one room, but the
visitor is guided around well-lit and beautifully displayed exhibits
and story boards which describe the process of mummification from
beginning to end, as well as the religious customs associated with
burials. |
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The purpose of mummification in ancient Egypt was to preserve the body
of the deceased so that they could dwell in the afterlife, in the
realm of the gods. The process began naturally when the ancient people
discovered that bodies buried in the hot dry sand of Egypt would be
preserved almost intact. Techniques were enhanced from very early
times, using natron to dry out the body, removing certain organs and
wrapping the remains tightly in bandages of linen, often covered with
a thick resin. The peak of the art was reached by the end of the New
Kingdom Period.
A collection of well-preserved mummy-cases, mostly from the dryer
climate of Upper Egypt, is displayed in the entrance to the museum
along with a statue of Anubis, the jackal-headed god who leads the
dead into the underworld.
In glass cases inside the museum, many artefacts associated with the
process are displayed with detailed descriptions of their use,
including model funerary boats, amulets, wooden statuettes and a fine
set of canopic jars. There are also animal mummies including a
crocodile, a cat and a ram of Khnum with its gilded case from
Elephantine. |
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| How to get there |
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The Mummification Museum is opposite the Etap Mercure Hotel on the
Corniche at Luxor. It is open from 9.00am to 1.00pm and 4.00pm to
9.00pm in winter (with different hours in summer). |
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